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  2. Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conference_on_Computer...

    The conference generally has less than 30% acceptance rates for all papers and less than 5% for oral presentations. [3] [4] [5] It is managed by a rotating group of volunteers who are chosen in a public election at the Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence-Technical Community (PAMI-TC) meeting four years before the meeting. [6]

  3. Jürgen Schmidhuber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jürgen_Schmidhuber

    An earlier CNN on GPU by Chellapilla et al. (2006) was 4 times faster than an equivalent implementation on CPU. [37] The deep CNN of Dan Ciresan et al. (2011) at IDSIA was already 60 times faster [ 38 ] and achieved the first superhuman performance in a computer vision contest in August 2011. [ 39 ]

  4. Computer vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_vision

    Computer vision papers on the web – a complete list of papers of the most relevant computer vision conferences. Computer Vision Online Archived 2011-11-30 at the Wayback Machine – news, source code, datasets and job offers related to computer vision; CVonline – Bob Fisher's Compendium of Computer Vision.

  5. International Conference on Computer Vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Conference...

    The ICCV Helmholtz Prize, known as the Test of Time Award before 2013, is awarded every other year at the ICCV, recognizing ICCV papers from ten or more years earlier that had a significant impact on computer vision research. [5] Winners are selected by the IEEE Computer Society's Technical Committee on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence ...

  6. Edmond & Lily Safra Center for Ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmond_&_Lily_Safra_Center...

    Founded as the Program in Ethics and the Professions in 1986, the center has supported the work of more than 800 fellows and visiting scholars. Many have spent a year or more at the center. [ 2 ] They include professors, graduate students, and undergraduates, journalists, physicians, lawyers, psychologists from many educational institutions and ...

  7. APA Ethics Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APA_Ethics_Code

    The American Psychological Association (APA) Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct (for short, the Ethics Code, as referred to by the APA) includes an introduction, preamble, a list of five aspirational principles and a list of ten enforceable standards that psychologists use to guide ethical decisions in practice, research, and education.

  8. Conflicts of interest in academic publishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conflicts_of_interest_in...

    The Council of Science Editors publishes a White Paper on publication ethics. Citing the ICMJE that "all participants in the peer-review and publication process must disclose all relationships that could be viewed as potential conflicts of interest", it highly recommends COI disclosure for sponsors, authors, reviewers, journals, and editorial ...

  9. Cyberethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyberethics

    Hands are shown typing on a backlit keyboard to communicate with a computer. Cyberethics is "a branch of ethics concerned with behavior in an online environment". [1] In another definition, it is the "exploration of the entire range of ethical and moral issues that arise in cyberspace" while cyberspace is understood to be "the electronic worlds made visible by the Internet."